I was curious about domains and looked for something. The domain was available, but it cost over $1,000,000

What would happen if I clicked “add to cart” and tried to buy it if…

  • I couldn’t afford it
  • I could afford it

Does someone reach out since it’s a big sale? How do they confirm I have the money? Who does the money go to?

Assuming I don’t have the money, at what point would I get blocked? I assume they don’t just process giant purchases the same way as $10 ones

  • NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Assuming I don’t have the money, at what point would I get blocked?

    First they would make sure to know who you are.

    Then the deal breaks, you don’t get your domain, and you owe them a nice amount for damages. That won’t go away. They would come after you and strip you of everything you have, probably for years to come.

      • NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        What damages?

        That depends on the legislation, where it happens.

        In my country, you owe the full amount of 1 million because that’s the price you have agreed. The fact that you don’t have so much money does not change your duties.

        Then you can go to court and say it was an error. Probably the judge decides for you (but not sure). Then you owe them damages only for all the efforts they have made in relation to this business have been in vain, and this may yet become very extensive.

        • KISSmyOS@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          So, if I go to a car dealership and tell them I want to buy a $50k car,
          they run a credit check and find out I have $5 in my account and my credit rating is NOPE,
          …then according to you I now owe them $50k because I asked to buy the car?

          • Deestan@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            If you are legally adult, and agree to buy the car by entering a contract, you owe them $50k whether or not you have it and they owe you a car whether or not you can pay.

            This is why car dealerships usually check your credit before agreeing.

            If either of you can’t hold up the agreement, them the contract is broken and you must find some middle ground that works out, frequently via the court system. Usually you would return the car and pay them for their trouble.

            Contracts are usually roughly that, but there can be stipulations on payment before delivery or how contract break is handled, etc.

            • KISSmyOS@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              A contract becomes binding after both parties agreed to it.

              Going back to the example with the domain, the domain holder simply won’t agree to the sale before you can prove that you can pay.
              So there is no legally binding contract, there is no sale, there are no debts or damages. You’ll just be told to fuck off.